In this episode, Evan Zinaman, founder and principal at Trailbreak, delves into the first-of-its-kind case of the Bueno brothers, who face Department of Justice charges for exploiting Maximal Extractable Value (MEV)) in a cryptocurrency scheme. Accused of manipulating transaction ordering to create an arbitrage opportunity, the brothers are charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud as well as wire fraud itself.
Zinaman explores the broader implications of MEV exploitation, addresses critics who say that the MEV exploiters just got a taste of their own medicine, and the need for block building participants to consider their legal and compliance responsibilities.
Show highlights:
What the charges against the Bueno brothers are about
How block building works on Ethereum and how the relay was manipulated by the Bueno brothers
The different types of MEV and which ones are acceptable
Why these charges could be seen as a "vanilla fraud," according to Evan
Whether the benefits of MEV outweigh the cons of it
The lack of terms of service in the MEV space
How the regulators' attention to the space has changed over time
Visit our website for breaking news, analysis, op-eds, articles to learn about crypto, and much more: unchainedcrypto.com
**First Bits + Bips episode: **Bits + Bips: Does Macroeconomics Point to a Potential Crypto Supercycle?)
- Evan Zinaman), Founder & Principal at Trailbreak
Where the Rubber Meets the Road): A MEV-Aware, Functionalist Review of OFAC Risk "on the Base Layer"
Previous coverage on Unchained of MEV:
The Chopping Block: Why the Once-Taboo MEV Is Now a Core Part of Ethereum)
The Mango Markets Attacker on Whether His 'Trade' Was Ethical or Not)
The Chopping Block: ‘Code Is Law’ Is ‘Obviously Not How Anything Works Ever’)
The Case:
Research:
- Blockchain Transaction Ordering as Market Manipulation) by Mikolaj et al
**Learn more: **
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